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U v J A.lli;s(. VKl),\i:iUJll. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, MONDAY HORNING, SEPTEMBER 14, I*4G. \OI„ XXIV—NO. 36.
THE CONSTITUTIONALIST.
OFFICE IN -McINTOSH-STREET,
Third door from the North - Wert corner of liroad-st
Silk's of LAM* by Administrators. Executors ° r
Guardians. are required, by 1; w, to be held on the
tirst Tuesday in the month, between the hour* of
t,«n tn the forenoon and three in theaftemoon.at
the Court House in which the property is situate.
Notice of these sales must be given in a public
Gazette sixty days previous to the day ol sale.
Sales of NEGROES must heat public auction.on
the first Tiic.-day of the month, be tween the usual
hours of sale, at the place of public sales in the
county where the Letters Testamentary, or Ad
ministration, or Guardianship, may have been
granted, first giving sixty days’ n*tn
in one of the public Gazettes of this Slate. and at
the door of the Court House whereauchsalesare
to be held.
Notice for the sale of Personal Property must be
given in I ike-man tier forty da vspre vious today
of sale.
Notice to the Debtors and Creditors of an Estate
must be published for forty days.
Notice that application will he made to theCourtof
Ordinary f<»r leave to sell LAND, must be pub
fished for four months.
Notice for leave to s--ll NEGROES, must be pub
lished four months before any orderabsolute
can be given by the Court.
LOOK AT THIS.
Here is a nut-shell argument which
has never been answered and never will
be.—The whole question of commercial
freedom might be rested upon the irre
s slible analogy which it affirds. We
remember the sledge-hummer style in
which Lkggett was wont to itrgo it in
bis Plaindeale.r , although the present
shape of the thought is Horn the Boston
Chronoi ype.
Free trade does exist, and has existed
between from thirteen to twenty-six sov- i
ereign republics, for fitly years or more, |
and who savs it is a failure? \mi have |
only to cut off the Eastern Hemisphere,
and shave down the Western a little, and
there would tie nothing but free trade in
the world.—Now, O restrictionist, lake
any one of the twenty six sovereign
States of the Union, and say if it could lie
benefittetl hy any restrictions on trade
with the rest. Individuals and classes
might be enrichened by it to lie sure, but
there is not a man claiming the smallest
thimble-full of bruins, who would not >ay
that the Slate as a whole would be made
the poorer by the restriction, if it operated
at all—and if it (fid not operate, it would
be no restriction. If free trade i> pracii
callv good between twenty nr thirty dis
ferent countries, extending over a space
2000 miles square, bow does it become
bad the moment vou overstep that extent?
If trade must bo trammelled Against
European industry for the benefit of Mas
sachusetts industry, why should it not be
trammelled against Massachusetts Indus,
try for the benefit of that of Ohio? We
should like to see Mr, Abbot Lawrence
and Mr. Nathan Appleton co ne up to the
work like men, and answer this. Let
them, if they can, tell us why sauce for
the goose is not sauce for the gander. If
we are to have restrictions on trade, lest
theindustiy of Massachusetts should be
overwhelmed by foreign production, let
them tell why it would not, on the same
principle, be wise to restrict internal
trade lest the weavers ot Pittsburgh
should be overwhelmed with the super
abundance of the webs of Lowell, and
the farmers of Massachusetts lie prostra
ted by the plenty ot wheat and ion in
Illinois. How would our cotton loids of
American Manchester like to have the
plebiaii landlords of New England get
the constitution and la ws so amended as to
give them a nice piotection against W est
ern Hour and pork, and set the spindles
to buzzing on the Cuyahoga, the JSt. Jo
seph's, and the Fox rivers?
Coals Going to New Castle. — A
strange thing has happened. The Phila
delphia U- S. Gazette says that “a hun
dred artisans took in the ship
Shenandoah, from Philadelphia, for Eng
land, in the full impression that better
wages will be there had during the coming
year, than in this country.” The Ga
zette is a high tariff paper, and so must
be believed. The Boston Evening Jour,
nal, a high tariff papet also, says ’.hat
fourteen calico printers have gone home
to England fiom Fall lliver afii'” employ
ment. and we understood the Journal to
say so on authoiity of the Tribune—hon
orable protectionists ail. proclaiming
from day to day that wages are so much
dearer here than there, that competition
can no w ise be maintained but under the
protection of a high tanff. and that free
trade will reduce the laborers of this
country to the miserable condition of the
operatives of England. The general
rate of wages has not declined in tbi>
country. The decline, it any, is onlv
among a few of the manufacturers, and
that not from the general and customary
rates of w ages, but only from the extrava
gant and accidentally high rates, induced
bv the enormous profits ot the last three
years. Yet artisans are going to England
for better wages than they find lieie! It
we see w ater running in a particular di
rection. we know that the land declines in
that direction. Labor and merchandise
flow towards the better market; in fad.
that causes the movement, as is avowed
in this case. Is there any possible ac
count to be given of this fact, consistent
with the honesty ol these editors and their
coadjutors in and out of Congress; or have
they in one great combination, been tell
ing lies to the people to cheat them of
their money?— Jour, of Con.
[From the N. Y. Journal of Commerce .]
The Providence Journal and the Rich
mond Whig will have it that we threaten
the manufacturers with direct taxation.
That ha* ever been the chicanery wi’h
which honest forewarnings have been
met. We state the truth about a rising
favor for direct taxation, and give it as
our opinion that further agitation of the
tariff question will lie likely to result in
further ieductions; and these papers meet
the matter with slang, and tell us we
threaten. Well, we shall not stand on
j the defensive. Lei it go so. if these pa
pers please. Both these papers declare
direct taxation to be the only mode of
laising taxes which is consistent with free
tiade principles, and flare the aclministra
non to resort to it. They talk just as w’e
sav men are talking, and then charge us
with threatening, because vve say they
talk so. There is one idea w hich all the
papers who talk in this way seem not to
have thought of, viz; that there are vari
-1 oil' wavs of raising revenue by what is
! ordinalily termed direct taxation. Ex
cises and stamps are not tariffs on im
-1 ports, and do not imply anv especial
burthen on the South. If such a tax
w ere proposed the constitution di reds
i shall be apportioned, according to repre
| sen latum, our impression is that the South
; would voe for it. But if we must
threaten, we should like to a>k these deft
■ eis what they would think of adopting
the svsiern, so successful in England, of
an income tax —a tax, sav, on all in
j i
i comes greater than five hundred dollars
I annuallv; a tax on gold watches, coaches,
, notes of h ;nd, &c. Would such a plan |
; displease the masses, and upset the de- |
mocracy? We had aII this in the country |
during the last war, except the income |
tax; and if that should lie proposed, we
threaten that it would give the adminis
tration irresistible strength. We threaten,
too, that such a tax would be much more
equal titan a tariff on imports. It is no
uncommon thing to hear it said that men
who have no property have no stake in the
government, and therefore have nothing
to do in controlling it. Yet while our re
venues are derived from a tariff, we
threaten that a great many men whose in
come is not s>3oo, pay more taxes than
j many others whose incomes are 83,000,
and 830,000, or even SIOO,OOO. We
threaten that such a state of things is
; strangely unequal, and that a proposition
to change it would run like wild fire over
tiie country. We threaten that these
i things are worth thinking of; and there
! is a good deal more which could be sug
■ gested, which would render the future
I siill more ominous. But as we threaten,
| above all, to be in favor of the present
system, and the tariff as it is, we shall
not go further into the matter, unless we
, are further defied.
Ripe Bread. —The staff of life is what
we must all lean on for existence. !i is
| Ike great necessary of life, and when and
; how to use it, is a matter of moment to
all. We therefore, for the benefit ot all
—our readers—transcribe from one of
i our exchanges the following very excel
i lent remarks on ripe bread:
Bread made from wheat flour, when
taken out of the oven, is unprepared for
the stomach. It should go through a
change, or ripen, before it is eaten. —
oung persons, or persons in the enjoy
ment of vigorous health, may eat bread
immediately after being baked, without
any sensible injuiy from it; but weakly
and aged persons cannot, and none can
j cat such, without doing harm to the di
gestive organs. Bread, after being baked,
goes through a change*, similar to the
change in newly brewed beer, or newly
churned buttermilk, neither being healthy
until after ihe change. During the change
in bread, it sends off a laige. portion of
carbon, or unhealthy gas, and imbibes a
large portion of healthy gas. Bread has,
according to the computation ot physi
cians, one fifth more nutriment in it when
ripe, than it has vv hen jus: out ol the oven.
It not only has more nutriment, but im
parts a much greater degree of cheerful
ness. He that eats old ripe bread will
have a much greater flow of animal spi
fits than ho would were he to eat unripe
bread. —Bread, as before observed, dis
l charges carbon, and imbibes oxygen.
One tiling, inconneclion with this thought,
should be particularly noticed by all
housewives. It is to let the bread ripen,
w here it can inhale the oxygen in a pure
; state. Bread will always taste oftheair
tfiat surrounds it while ripening; hence,
it should ripen in the pure air. It should
never ripen in a cellar, nor in a close
cupb 'ard, nor in a bed room. The nox
ious vapors of a cellar, or a cupboard,
: never should enter into and form a part
jof the bread we eat. Bread should lie
light, well baked and properly ripened
; before is is eaten.
Bread that is several days old, may be
renewed, so as to have all the freshness
and lightness of new bread, by simply
putting it into a common steamer over a
flip, and steaming it half or three-quarters
ol an hour. The vessel under the steam
er, containing the water, should not be
more than halt' full; otherwise, the water
may boil up into the steamer, and wet
'he bread. After the. bread is thus steam
ed, it should be taken out of the steamer,
and wrapped loosely in a doth, to dry and
cool, and remain so a short time, when it
will be ready to be cut and used.
[From the St. Louis Reveille,]
CATCHING A GREEN ONE.
BY SOLITAIRE.
Linnville, in the Flatie country, has
been celebrated since the first advent of
civilization in that region, for the unmar.
j riageable qnali y of several old maids,
who. full of hope, had emigrated to the
promising lands of the w est. There is,
for a certainty, a demand for girls in the
west, and many aident young men are
eager to throw themselves into the arms
of beauiv—on certain conditions —that it
is youthfu' beauty. Sail vCI in toe, one of
these old maids we speak of. nad a cer
i tain share of beauty, but it could not well
be called young and tender, unless you
can call thirty a tender age; but, with
Iter increase of the fir-t of truelove burn
ing out, they increased in strength, until,
w ith the aid of her mother, Sally resolved
to have a husband, if she had to trap him
with a fLh net. Ben. Ellis was thegt/d- i
gcon Sally fixed her eye upon, for the
very reason, it would appear, that lie w*as
the opposite to her in general character,
and in years in particular. He was
young, and mqreover, tender, and, be- |
sides, partook strongly of a verdant hue, ;
even to downright greenness in his percep
lion of all things, even to women; w hile,
O 7
i on the contrary, Sally had grown into a
know in'* brown , and “knew all things i
' . 'I
I with a learned spirit,”even to the “catch- |
I ing a green one.”
Many efforts were made hy Sally to
j attract Ben’s attention, but his bashful- |
1 ness was a bar to these tender essays; i
and if she succeeded at church, on Sun
j dav, to catch his eye for a moment, it was
; in vain she watched through the whole
| service for a second glance—it was not !
i to he had. She seated herself in the new I
before him and behind him, but all to no I
purpose; lie manifested an obstinate ad- |
herence to his diffident manner, until at !
length she determined to “carry llie war
into Africa,” as the politicians say, and
resolutely entered the same pew he occu- :
pied, and set herself right bang up against
him. Ben. turned pale, quivered slight- j
Iv, and alt ho’ brought up all standing, sue- j
ceeded in regaining his breath alter the ■
! shock, but look at her he wouldn’t. In
vain she held the hymn book at him—
-1 fruitless was her manoeuvre of going |
j upon her knees during prayer, and di- 1
rectly fronting him; he steadily fixed his
| eyes on a stripe in his pantaloons, and re-
I fused to see the full blown charms before
1 him. Sally noted his indifference, and
grew desperate; Ben. noticed her shawl
tremble, and he became afflicted with a
slight anuetoo. Matte.s were coming to
, ...
a crisis, and soon they banged in collision,
for at the very moment Ben. was prepar
| ing to jump into the next pew, Sally
dropped right over upon him in a well
executed fainting fit. The poor fellow
came nigh falling out of his bools, he was
J so frightened; but seizing her with a
j show of courage, he held her up while the
women piied her with their salt bottles.
After a few preliminary sneezes she re
vived, and salt, of whose properties we
have great faith, had affected another
| cure. The drooping flower which hung
| upon our hero now, in a voice soft as the
I breathings of any instrument you like,
j implored Ben. to take her home to her
! via —how* could he refuse?—be couldn’t!
Raising her form, which some writers
would call fragile, hut which 1, who wish
to lie particular, slate as weighing about
175 pounds, [fen. conducted her from the
sanctuary; and by lists weak act of his
head, which was aided by all th b strength
i of his bodyq he '••he put his fool in it!”
When they arrived at the maternal
mansion, Ben. was about to modestly take
his leave, but Sally come the fainting
i manoeuvre over him again, and he was
j forced to carry her into her ma, where
she went through another reviving pro
: cess; but as her eves became lighted by
consciousness they lit on Ben., and offshe
went again, to his infinite terror.
“What have vou bin doin’ to the gal!”
?creamed old Mrs. Clintoc, fastening the
door at the same time, and seized the
tongs.
“I aim bin doin’ nothin’, ” says Ren.,
“ ’cept helpin’ her home frutn meelin’
wharshe tuck sick.”
“What ails you, Sally, my’ darter?”
inquired the old lady in a sympathetic
whine; “has this fellar bin triflin’ with
your feeliri*s*, my dear?”
“No, I aim leeched her!” shouted Ben.
“Oh! Benny, Benny,” murmured Sai
i Iv, “vou know you have, you daceiver!
Hevint you got my feel in’s in your power
so I can’t do nothin’ with ’em, and w hen
vou know’d I loved you so 1 couldn’t do
’thorn you, then didn’t you persist in not
lookin’ at me, till I fainted?—you know
I you did.”
“I’ll stvar,’ says Ben.” “that I never
teched her feelin’s, and more’n that, I
| don’t want to, so I reckon that’ll satisfy
you, and now I’m going’,” saying which
i he moved for the door.
••No ynu don’t,’’said Sally’s ma; “you
aim going to tr.fle with my gal's feelin’s
i in that way and then clar out and leave
her!” and seizing Ben. by the collar, she
snatched him back f rom the door with one
* hand, while she shook the tongs over bis
bead w ith the other, Sally all the lime sob
bing a symphony, broken now* and then
, with the exclamation ot—“Oh, you cruel
! creaturl”
“When you have been acting this way
with the gal,” said Mrs, 0., “why don’t
i you behave like a gentleman, and gin
vourselve up to her as a decent husbind.
You young Cellars hev no right to be go
| in* round the settl emenf year arter year
lookin’ at the gals and aggravitin’ thur
teelifts’and never gitlin’ married to none
on ’em. Consarn your picturs, you shan’t
j do it with my gal. so thar’s an eend on it
j —Sally’s bin watin’ for you long enough |
so gin in at oust.”
i *
“What in the yearth do you want me
to do?” inquired Ben.
“Promise to marry the gal rite, strait,
: or you’ll ketch it,” said the angry mama,
i brandishing her tongs.
Ben, looked at the daughter as if ta- 1
king in her dimensions—she was tolera
j hie for thirty , and he thought she might
be endured—then taking a step towards
her, he gently placed his hand upon her !
arm, took another look at the old lady
and her tongs, and —“gin in! ”
“I’ll hev you Sally,” says Ben., “it
you will only quit weepin.’ Just stop
cryin’ now, and don’t say nothin’ more j
about my dreevin’on you ’cause I didn’t,
and you can hev me whenever you can
git me.”
This declaration set Sally smiling ;
through her tears, like a widow who had j
received a second offer, and jumping up,
i she threw her arms around Ben* neck,
and encouraged his bashfulness by be
• stow ing upon him a fond-kiss. He w ished
: to leave now for home, but two full grown
| men, cousins of Sally, either by accident
! or invitation came in on a visit, and hear- |
i ing how matters stood, proposed for the
fun of the thing, to have the marriage
straightway solemnized. Ben. was about
1 to object, but cousins, old ma and tongs
! made the odds so strong against him, that
! like mutton , he suffered himself to be led
|to the sacrifice. The Squire of Linnville
1 was called in, the knot tied, the bride
kissed by the magistrate and then the
bridegroom was permitted to go home for
; some of his fixins. We would fain stop
here, but as we are recording Linnville 1
i history it is our duty to unflinchingly re- |
j late the termination of this match. Ben. |
; immediately packed up his duds, pocket- I
j ed his spare change, and, before the morn- |
; ing sun had shed its golden beams over j
: the flower-be gemmed prairiesof the west, .
1 was far on his way towards the Santa Fe
trace, leaving his bride logo to grass or
any other kind of widowhood. Toafriend i
I whom lie afterwards met in Mexico, he j
1 remarked that he had become fully con
| vinced that Sally had designs upon him I
and hoped to make him a husband under j
false pretences. Sally persists in wear- i
| ing black for Ben. because, she says it is
| becoming to her complexion!
SUGAR.
Sir Walter Scott, in his story of Napo
leon, ridicules the emperor’s patronage of
j the first attempt to manufacture beet su-
I gar in France. He had a small loaf which
he kept under a glass on his mantelpiece
las a specimen. Time shows that Napo
leon was not mistaken. It appears that
this manufacture tlie present year sur
: passes to a remarkable extent that of any
previous X : ear. At the end of May there
i had been manufactured 88.000.000 lbs.
j nearly ten millions more than any pre- j
| vious year. This paid into the treasury ;
of the country over eight millions francs, ;
or two and a half millions more, than last i
year. There are now not less than three i
hundred and six manufactories in full !
i operation, and only three in the whole i
j kingdom not in operation, and this be- |
; cause they have as much sugar as they
; can store. Thirty manufactories have 1
1 been added tu the list during the past
I year.
i A commercial computation puts the
whole production of the sugar growing
countries of the world, in 1844, down at
i 778,000 ton*, of which 200,000 tons were
i furnished bvCubaalone. In the following i
! year Cuba produced 80,000 tons, but tfie :
increase from other sources was so great
that the total product amounted to 739,- 1
I 000 tons, which was very little short of |
that in 1844. The consumption of sugar
in the whole world is estimated at 800,-
000 tons, of which the United Kingdom
j consumes about 250,000, the rest of Eu- ;
rope 425,000, the United States of Arne- ;
i rica 150,000, and Canada and the other
British colonies 15,000. The growth of
the United States does not exceed 109,- 1
000 tens, for about two thirds of the con- i
\ 7 j
; sumption, and the deficiency is supplied j
by maple sugar and foreign importation. |
Wonders of Philosophy. —The Poly
pus receives new life from the knife
| which is lifted to destroy it. The fly-spi
der lays an egg as large as itself. There
! are 4.041 muscles in a caterpillar. Hook
discovered 14.000 mirrors in the eyes of
a drone; and to effect the respiration of a
carp. 13.000 arteries, vessels, veins, and
bones, &e. are necessary. The body of
every spider domains ft ur little masses
pierced with a multitude of imperceptible
boles, each hole permitting the passage of
a single thread; all the threads, to the
amount of 1000 to each mass join togeth
er when they come out and make thread
; with which the spider spins its web: so
i that what we call a spider’s thread con
sists of more than 1000 united. Leuen
j hock, by means ofa microscope, observed
I spiders no larger, than a grain of sand,
! who spun threads so fine it took 4,000 of
; them to equal in magnitude a single hair.
CHARCOAL 'ROADS.
Some months ago, we asked the atten
tion of the planting community to the sub- '
■ jpef of Charcoal Roads, pointing out the
benefits at scarcely any expense, w hich
they might secure to themselves by lay
ing such roads. We have no doubt that
the matter has been favorably considered |
by many, but we have heard of no such
roads having been begun in our neighbor
hood. The Report of the Commissioner i
I of Patents gives additional importance to
; the improvement, and in the Appendix, ,
No, 38, has the following, to which we in
vite attention.
We are aware of the opinion of many,
that the swamp soil, prepared in nearly
the same way us is pointed out in the fol
| lowing article, makes a more durable ;
j road. We shall be happy to receive com- J
munications on that and kindred subjects ;
of utility from some of our planting
I friends.
Charcoal Road. —The process of ma
king such a road is described bv a writer
i in the Cleveland Herald, as follows;
“Timber from six to eighteen inches
j through is cut twenty-four feet long, and
| piled up lengthwise in the centre ol the
i road about five feet high, bcitig nine feel
; wide at the bottom and two at the top, and
1 then covered with straw* and earth in the
manner of coal pits. The earth required
to cover the pile, taken from either side,
leaves two good sized ditches, and the
timber, although not split, is easily ;
charred; and, when charred, the earth is j
I removed to the side of the ditches, the coal |
raked down to a width ot fifteen feet, lea
ving it two feet thick at the centre and !
one at the sides, and the road is com- j
pleted.”
A road of this" kind is now being made
in the Cotton Wood swamp near Blissfield j
in Michigan. From the writer above j
quoted we learn that about seventy roods
are completed, twenty of which have been
used for the last seven months, and the
balance for three months; and as it is on
i the great thoroughfare west, and as, in
1 addition, on an average, sixteen heavy ;
: loaded teams to and from an ashery pass |
I over it daily, it has been very well tried j
| during the winter and spring, and yet |
I there is no appearance of ruts, but it pre
i sents an even, hard surface.
( 7
The company making the road, pay :
the contractors at the rate of 8660 a mile.
1 The road is said to become very compact, j
S and to be free from mud or dust. Hon.
Elisha Whittlesey, and Mr. Newton, an j
i engineer who inspected the Blissfijld road
I above mentioned, state that they passed
: over it, the morning after a rain.
“At each end of the different sections j
of tlie coal road, the mud on the cause- :
way was felloe deep where there was (hat
depth of earth, and nearly or quite half- i
axlelree deep where the logs were broken;
when, on the coal road, there was not the
least standing, and the impress of tlie feel ;
of a horse passing rapidly over it was like
that made on hard washed sand, as the :
surf recedes on the shore of the lake, j
The wat“r is not drained from the ditches, ;
and yet there are no ruts or inequalities ;
in the surface of the coal road, except ;
what is produced by more compact pack
ing on the line of travel. We think it is
j probable that coal will fully compensate 1
; tor the deficiency of limestone and gravel 1
; in many sections of the west, and, where
j a road is to be constructed through forest
1 land, that coal may he used at a fourth of
! the expense of limestone.”
jfjjl
UAITJUU STATES HOTEL,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. 1
i To line travelling public and old friends in particular. \
MI beg leave to inform you that I have ,
made my last move in Augusta, hack to j
my old stand the United States Hotel, on :
Rroad-street,opposite the Bank of Augusta.
Ever grateful for past favors, 1 feel assured that
you will excuse me for again soliciting a ronlinu
i ance of your patronage, as 1 invite you to the must j
! central hotel and business part of the city.
The hotel has recently been enlarged, with many
improvements, and is now under the sole charge of
your friend and humble servant,
; oci 28 DANIEL MIXER.
iftf* GLOBE HOTEL S
• fea'- AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. r-I A
I The subscriber respectfully informs the Planters,
S Merchants, and Traveling Public, that he is now
1 the proprietor of this well-known and spacious Ho
tel. The proprietor hopes from the central location
of his House and his personal attention to, and ac
quaintance with the business, to receive a liberal
share of patronage. Travelers going through, can
at all tim-s be furnished with refreshments upon
the arrival of the cars.
F. M. JENNINGS.
April I, IS 16. 121
Ctj”Having sold out my interest in the
GLOBE HOTEL to Mr. Jennings. I return to ray
; friends who have so long patronized me, my most
sincere thanks, and in doing so, it affords me plea
i sure that I can confidently ask their support and
friendship for Mr. Jennings, with the as.-urance
that, on his part, nothing will be omitted that can
contribute to their comfort and quiet. Give him a
, trial, and “if lie dees not do the thing up brown,”
■ then quit him. B. F. KENRICK.
april 1 6m 121
FURNITURE STORE.
THE subscriber respectfully announces to the
public that he has taken the FURNITURE
STORE so long and favorably known as H. Par
i sons’, where he will, in future, keep a general
i supply of every article in his line, to which lie in
• vires rhe aneution of persons desirous to purchase
1 may B DANIEL CHAFFEE.
FIR E-PR OOF WARE-HOUSE.
AUG US TA, GKOUGIA.
undersigned, grateful tor the patronage
H. heretofore received, informs his customer*
and the public generally, that lie w ill continue the
WARE-HOUSE AND COMMISSION BUSI
NESS in the extensive Fire-Proif Ware-House
on ihe<orner« f Washington and Reynold-streel*.
He will, as heretofore, give his persona) atten
tinn to the storaue and sal** of Cotton, and ail other
kinds of country produce; and to the purchase of
Family Supplies, Bagging, Ace., and pledges him
self to use every exertion to promote the interest of
those w ho may entrust their business to his charge.
He is prepared to make liberal cash advance*,
when required, on produce in store.
His charges will be in conformity with thoae of
other regular factors of this city.
M’. P. STOVALL,
august r> wtf 19
Jon.\ M. Adams, j Lambeth Hopkins,
Francis T. Willis.
ADAMS, HOPKINS & CO.,
WAREHOUSE & COMMISSION MER
CHANTS, AUGUSTA,
a rs*. CON TINUE the business at
personal attention to all bnsineaa
entrusted to them, especially th*
STORAGE AND SALE OF
COTTON.
Their charges will conform to the customary
rates. 3u 20t. aug. 31.
PLEASANT STOVALL,
WAREHOI SE AND COMMISSION MERCHANT
WILL CONTINUE THE ABOVE BUSI
w w NESS on kis oten account, on the first of
September next, at the Warehouse of Stovall &.
Simmons,at which time that fiun u ill he dissolved.
Arrangements have been made with Messrs. An
dres, Npears 4" Woottcn, (to whom said Warehouse
is rented for the ensuing year.) for storage of
Cotton and other produce consigned to him. Ha
has also engaged the services ol his present part
ner, Mr. G. Simmons.
Augusta. July 30, 1846. aplO aug 26
WAREHOUSE & COMMISSION
HUS! N us s.
Andres, Bpears Sc Woollen.
THtHE undersigned tender their thanks to their
B friends generally, for the patronage hereto
fore exten Jed to them, and take pleasure in in*
forming them that they will take charge, on th*
first day of September, of the large and commodi
ous FIRE-PROOF WAREHOUSE, on Bruad-st.,
recently occupied by Stovall & Simmons, f>r the
transaction of a General Warehouse and Commis
sion Business, and would solicit from their friend*
and the public, a liberal share of patronage, w hich
they intend, by strict attention to the interest of
their friends, to merit.
Our charges shall be as low as any other house
in the city.
All orders for goods will be strictly attended to
and carefully selected by one of the pariners.
Liberal advances made on produce in store when
required. VVM. ANDRES,
F. SPEAKS,
J. T. WOOTTEN.
Augusta, August 26, 181(5. w 4
WAREHOUS E & COMMISSION
u u s I N ESS.
Jackson-Street , Augusta, Georgia ,
HEARD &, DAVISON.
t The undersigned have entered
f T *3) into co-partnership for the purpose
of transacting a Warehouse and
£‘ enPru ' i Commission Business, at
the Warehouse recently occupied
by I. T. Heard & Co., Jackson-street, under the
firm of Heard & Davison.
Personal attention will be given to the sale and
management of Cotton, and other produce entrust
ed to their care; and all Cotton stored with then
will he kept fully coveredhy Insurance, free of any
additional charge to the owners.
Liberal cash advances made on Cotton in store.
Our c harges will be the same as those of other re
gular Commission houses in this city.
I. T. HEARD,
JOHN DAVISON,
august 19 wtDl 25
WAREHOUSE & COMMISSION
B U S INIISS.
undersigned, having purchased from Mr.
. Joseph M. Robehts, his interest in the lata
firm of Doughty, Beall & Roberts, will continue
1 the Warehouse and Commission Business on theif
ow ii account, at the same stand on Jackson-street,
; (which leads directly from the Rail Road Depot,
i hy the Globe Hotel and Mansion House, to the
l River,) under the firm of DOUGHTY Ac BEALL,
1 and tender their services to the patrons of the lata
I firm and the public generally.
Our personal attention will be devoted to the
i interest of customers, and the rale of charges, such
i as are mads by other regular Factors in lids city.
Orders fur Bagging, Rope, &c., cUc., will be
promptly executed at the lowest market price*.
E. W. DOUGHTY'.
W. A. BEALL.
Augusta. August 21,1816. 3w6 2G
luTVSON & WE AVER’S
i Extensive Fire-Proof Ware-House-
undersigned respectfully inform their
H. friends and the public, that they still continue
i the
; WARE-HOUSE & COMMISSION BUSINESS,
1 at their old Stand on MMntosh Street, where they
j will devote their personal attention to all business
I entrusted to their care.
Their rates for Selling and Storing Cotton and
! other Produce, will he the same as other regular
I houses.
Orders for purchasing Groceries, Bagging. Rope,
1 &c., will be promptly filled at the lowest market
j prices. DAWSON Sc. WEAVER,
j July 31 6m 17
M. M. DYE, E. D. ROBERTSON.
DYE & ROBERTSON,
j WAREHOUSE & IOMMISS.th MERCHANTS,
Hast side of Mclntosh-st , Augusta Ga.
THE undersigned have entered into partner
ship. to take effect after the first of Septem
ber next, for the transaction of the above business,
in all its various branches, at the present stand of
M. M. Dye. Their personal attention will be given
i to all cotton or other produce entrusted to their
I care.
All orders addressed to the new firm, after the
first of August next, will be punctually attended to.
Liberal cash advances made on cotton or other
; produce in store. Their charges will he in con
formity to the regular established rates of the City.
DYE & ROBERTSON,
julv 10 _tf B
i WAREHOUSE & COMMISSION
1! USI X I!SS.
GIBBS &, .McGORD.
FTpHE undersigned, having entered into co-part
i -H nership under the firm of GIBBS & McCORD,
i beg leave to offer themselves to their friends and
i the public generally, as WAREHOUSE AND
i COMMISSION MERCHANTS, and trust, by
’ strictly adhering to those rules which should go-
I vern ail Warehouse men, to merit a liberal share
; of patronage. They have taken the well-known
stand recently occupied hy Andrews <fe Wootten,
and will make all Cotton stored with them as safe
by insurance as any other Warehouse in the city.
They also pledge themselves not to pu-chase any
cotton in the transaction of their business, but will
give their undivided attention to the interests of
their pairons.
Their charges will be in conformity with those
i established in the city.
! {O"Libera! advances will be made on produce
in store, when required.
THOMAS F. GIBBS,
GEORGE McCORD-
Augusta. July 1, 1845. wtf july 17